No. The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a magnet, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract. actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick
When two magnets with like poles (either both north or both south) are placed next to each other, they will repel each other. This repulsion occurs because the magnetic fields of the like poles push against each other, creating a force that keeps the magnets apart. As a result, the magnets will tend to move away from one another rather than attract.
Magnets attract when the opposite poles (north and south) come together, creating a magnetic force. This attraction occurs due to the alignment of magnetic domains within the magnets, resulting in a force that pulls the magnets together.
north and north or south and south (red, red) (blue, blue)
A magnet has two poles, the north and the south. Opposite poles attract, meaning that a north pole will attract a south pole. Same poles repel; a north pole repels another north pole and a south pole repels another south pole. If two magnets attract each other, that pulls them together, and if they repel each other, that pushes them apart. That is the phenomenon that you observed, of magnets bouncing back when you try to put them together.
the poles on a magnet help to explain why magnets can stick together.the north pole will stick into the north pole.the magnetic forces of each magnet are moving in the same direction.
If you placed two magnets with their north poles end to end they would repel each other.
When two opposite poles of magnets are brought together (north and south), they attract each other and stick together. This is due to the magnetic field lines aligning and creating a force of attraction between the magnets.
When opposite magnets are brought close together, they attract each other and pull towards one another. This is because opposite poles of magnets (north and south) are attracted to each other due to their magnetic fields.
No. The north sides of two magnets do not stick together because they have the same polarity. The north and south sides of a magnet, however, do stick together because they are on opposite poles and, pertaining to magnets, opposites attract. actually if you push two repelling magnets together so they touch they will stick, without flipping, not entirely sure why they don't repel but it seems that the magnetic fields somehow overlap, so that within the repelling field there is a small of the attracting field, i know this isn't true of the attracting side because the magnets stick together regardless, but on the repelling side when they touch they will stick
When two magnets are brought together, they can either attract each other if their poles are opposite (North and South) or repel each other if their poles are the same (North and North, or South and South). This attraction or repulsion is due to the magnetic fields surrounding the magnets interacting with each other.
when the magnets repel they have the same poles facing each other. Like if you hold two north side pole together they will repel.
When two magnets with like poles (either both north or both south) are placed next to each other, they will repel each other. This repulsion occurs because the magnetic fields of the like poles push against each other, creating a force that keeps the magnets apart. As a result, the magnets will tend to move away from one another rather than attract.
Yes. If there are two magnets in front of each other, yes. North and North/South and South dont stay together.
You get a bunch of smaller magnets and you will still have north pole.
Magnets attract when the opposite poles (north and south) come together, creating a magnetic force. This attraction occurs due to the alignment of magnetic domains within the magnets, resulting in a force that pulls the magnets together.
Oh, dude, if you try to stick two north pole magnets together, they'll totally repel each other like exes at a high school reunion. It's like a force field of "nope, not today." So, yeah, they'll just push away from each other faster than I run from responsibilities.